Rescue of Ukrainian early historical climatological data · Rescue of Ukrainian early historical...
Transcript of Rescue of Ukrainian early historical climatological data · Rescue of Ukrainian early historical...
Rescue of Ukrainian early historical climatological dataDmytro Boichuk (1, 2), Jürg Luterbacher (3, 4, 5), Rob Allan (6), Olesya Skrynyk (2, 7), Vladyslav Sidenko (1, 2), Angelika Palarz (8), Dmytro Oshurok (2), Elena Xoplaki (3, 4), Oleg Skrynyk (2, 9), Volodymyr Osadchyi (2)
(1) Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Ukraine; (2) Ukrainian Hydrometeorlogical Institute, Kyiv, Ukraine; (3) Department of Geography, Climatology, Climate Dynamic and Climate Change, Justus Liebig University of Giessen, Germany; (4) Center of International Development and Environmental Research, Justus Liebig University of Giessen, Germany; (5) World Meteorological Organization (WMO), Department for Science and Innovation, Geneva, Switzerland; (6) Met Office Hadley Centre, Exeter, United Kingdom; (7) National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Ukraine, Kyiv, Ukraine; (8) Department of Climatology, Jagiellonian University, Kraków, Poland; (9) Center for Climate Change (C3), Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Tarragona, Spain
1 Introduction
2 Data
3 Methods 5 Conclusion• The quality control procedures revealed a fairly good agreement among
the rescued time series on the monthly time scale as well as a good
accordance with the monthly data from other sources
• However, several periods at some stations should be used with caution,
due to relatively large discrepancies revealed
• The rescued digital dataset can be used for different meteorological and
climatological purposes, including the analysis of extreme events for the
pre-1850, regional climatological studies, etc.
• The dataset is an important supplement to existing digitized archives of
meteorological measurements for the first half of the 19th century.
4 Results
ReferencesWMO (World Meteorological Organization). 2016. Guidelines on best practices for climate data rescue. WMO‐No. 1182, pp. 30. Geneva, Switzerland: WMO.URHMI (Ukrainian Research Hydrometeorlogical Institute). 1953. Meteorological Data for Separate Years. Issue 10a. Ukrainian SSR and Moldavian SSR. Part 1. Air Temperature. Kiev: Publishing of Academy of Science of USSR, 577 pp. (in Russian)
• Our focus was concentrated on original sub-daily pre-1850
meteorological observations conducted at 8 meteorological
stations located on the territory of the modern Ukraine.
These 8 meteorological stations are only ones whose pre-
1850 data have been found in a specialized archive of the
Central Geophysical Observatory (an observation institution
of the Ukrainian Weather Service).
• Meteorological stations: Kyiv, Kharkiv (Kharkiv, university),
Poltava, Kamyanets-Podilsky, Lugansk, Dnipro, Kherson
and Odesa.
Location of the rescued stations on the territory of Ukraine
• Detection and quantitative assessment of the recent climate change on global and regional scales is mainly performed
based on data of instrumental measurements conducted on meteorological/climatological stations all over the world. Modern
climate applications and climate services are seeing the need for more data and information (including its historical part) on
climate variability at high temporal and spatial resolution.
• It is obvious that the longer and detailed records are the more valuable information can be extracted from the data regarding
past, present and, definitely, future of the atmosphere, the climate and its variability. Their significant historical part still exists
only in a hard copy form and has not been digitized yet in order to be introduced into scientific analysis.
• The main objective of our work is to present information on results of data rescue (DARE) activity conducted recently in the
Ukrainian Hydrometeorological Institute (UHMI, Kyiv, Ukraine) in close collaboration with several national and international
partners.
• DARE was performed according to the recommendations of WMO (2016)
• All pages of the tables/books were photocopied.
• After creation of the database of the images, data were digitized manually by the authors
• Values of only three variables were digitized: air temperature, atmospheric pressure
(station level) and amount of atmospheric precipitations (rainfall).
• Several quality assurance procedures were performed in order to check the quality of
data and the digitization process, including comparison with data previously digitized
from other paper sources (URHMI, 1953) and intercomparison between stations by
means of HOMER software (both on the monthly scale)
Station
Geographical coordinates
Altitude ASL, mNumber of books
with records
Beginning of observations in
the rescued bookslatitude longitude
Kyiv 50º23'32'' 30º32'11'' 166 2 1812
Kharkiv 49º55'36'' 36º16'44'' 154 6 1840
Poltava 49º36'34'' 34º32'41'' 160 6 1824
Kamyanets-Podilskyi 48º41'36'' 26º36'31'' 217 1 1844
Lugansk 48º33'56'' 39º13'39'' 59 9 1827
Dnipro 48º21'36'' 35º05'06'' 142 6 1833
Kherson 46º44'18'' 32º42'30'' 47 2 1808
Odesa 46º26'27'' 30º46'13'' 42 6 1839
Remark. The geographical coordinates and altitudes are given for modern meteorological stations. These metadata are slightly different for the rescued stations because all of them were relocated to new places in every town/city.
Details on the rescued meteorological stations
• The data from all stations were stored in paper (hard copy) format in special
tables/books where meteorological records were made by hands (manually).
Their total number is 38.
• They are written in different languages (old Russian, German or French).
There is no unique format of the data records in the tables. They differ from
each other by a number of observed/measured meteorological variables, time
of observations, their frequency during a day etc.
• Several historical events such as WWII, had, probably, an influence on a state
of the climatological archive of the Ukrainian Weather Service and a volume of
the information preserved.
Examples of hard copy books with meteorological observations. To the left is Kharkiv(Kharkiv, University), 1840; to the right is Kharkiv (Kharkiv, University), 1843.
Examples of the original paper tables with meteorological observations (some explanations on the photos are shown in red). Top left panel: Kyiv, 1825; top right panel: Kherson 1827; bottom left panel: Lugansk 1850; bottom right panel: Odesa, 1840.
• In total 291 103 values were digitized.
• These include 165 980 air temperature records (~57% of the
total), 124 376 atmospheric pressure measurements (~42.7%) and 747 precipitation totals (~0.3%).
Time series of sub-daily air temperature measurements at Kyiv in 1816 (‘year without summer’). Temperature data were converted to the Celsius scale . The present climate sub-daily data (1981-2010) measured at the times closest to the supposed historical observations are also shown for comparison.
Scatter diagrams of monthly data digitized from URHMI (1953) against similar values calculated from the rescued data
• Apart from Kyiv, Kamyanets-
Podilskyi and Kherson, anomalies
between the two kinds of monthly
data increase with temperature
magnitude, which leads to the
significant seasonal/periodic
course of the anomalies
Time series of differences between monthly data calculated from the rescued records and from URHMI (1953). The figures for all stations were adjusted for the same temperature range for
convenient mutual comparison
• Based on QA part of the HOMER
software a mutual evaluation of
monthly time series was performed
and potential outliers were
localized.
• However, due to the large number
of missing values along with the
small number of stations analyzed,
the results of such evaluation have
limited validity.
Graphical output of HOMER’s QA procedure for atmospheric pressure at Poltava and Odesa